Aviation Insider

Articles giving aviation insights

Pune Airport To Get Automatic Passport & Visa Scanning Gates!

Standing in serpentine queues and scrutiny by immigration officers could soon be a thing of the past at the Pune airport in Lohegaon.

The authorities at the facility are in the process of revamping the whole immigration setup. Under the new system, passengers will soon be able to scan their passports and visas at electronic immigration gates.

According to an airport official, A system is being designed under which, if a passenger has a valid passport and a visa, the gates will open and he/she can pass through.

At the moment, there are five immigration gates each in the arrival and departure areas, apart from three gates for those holding e-visas. The new system is expected to completely replace the existing system.

Of course, this does not mean there will be no immigration officers present. They will be there to monitor passengers movement. They can always question a passenger if the gates don’t open upon scanning or if they have doubts.

Airport officials are also working on developing another system to include a biometric scanner. This will enable passengers to authenticate themselves using their fingerprints.

The system is expected to roll out next year and is a part of the DigiYatra Programme.

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IndiGo Pilot Avoids Major Air Mishap At Chennai Airport!

It was a close shave for 40 passengers on board an IndiGo flight from  Rajahmundry to Chennai after a major air mishap was averted at Chennai Airport on Monday.

The plane’s second engine reportedly failed at the time of the landing, causing the pilot to declare Mayday.

IndiGo released a statement about the incident, saying that the pilot was forced to send the distress call after the aircraft suffered a technical glitch while landing. A full emergency had to be declared at Chennai airport following the incident.

The flight, 6E-7123, eventually landed at the airport after hovering for a while in the air. No passenger was injured during this incident.

Here are all the details of the incident:

  • The flight 6E 7124 with 51 persons, including four crew members, developed engine problem during its Rajamundry-Chennai flight
  • The pilot noticed shortly before its scheduled arrival time 5.45 pm that one of the two engines on the aircraft had failed
  • The pilot immediately alerted the ATC (air traffic control) tower at the Chennai airport, who told him to keep circling over the airport for about 30 minutes
  • ATC gave them clearance after taking all the precautionary and preparatory work for an emergency landing.
  • Great luck and skillful handling by the pilot saw the propeller aircraft land safely, without any injuries to any passengers of crew members.

The plane landed at about 6.15 pm and the visibly relieved passengers disembarked without panic.

Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has now ordered a probe into the engine failure and more importantly, on why the Chennai airport authorities, as well as the airlines, did not report the matter to the Authority as soon as it occurred.

Last Friday, another IndiGo aircraft had been involved in a possible air mishap after an IndiGo Airbus A320 Neo, flying from Lucknow to Kolkata, was forced to return to Lucknow following an issue with the aircraft’s engine. The flight 6E-866 returned to Lucknow, where it was grounded and the passengers were made to fly in an alternative plane

 

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DO YOU KNOW: How Airport Slots Are Allotted To Airlines?

A few weeks ago, SpiceJet & IndiGo announced that they will be connecting Delhi And Bangalore to Hong Kong respectively.

With Air India having publicly stated in the past that they are not getting desirable slots at Hong Kong for their flights from Mumbai, there was a lot of social media buzz on how did the two low-cost carriers manage to get the slots.

Did they pay? Did they purchase? Did somebody lend it to them?

These questions made us wonder how is airline slot allocation done. It’s a very complex process but there is a method in the madness.

How Is An Airline Allotted An Airport Slot?

Worldwide there are different rules for slot management. However, they are mostly allotted based on World Slot Guidelines (WSG) of International Air Transport Association (IATA).

While airports like London Heathrow allow sale or lease of slots, airports in India do not follow this practice.

An Airport slot or a “slot” is a permission given by a coordinator for a planned operation to use the full range of airport infrastructure necessary to arrive or depart on a specific date and time.

IATA puts airports into 3 different categories- Level1, Level 2, Level 3, with Level 3 being the most congested in terms of airplane movement.

In simple terms, a level 3 airport is one where:

  • Demand for airport infrastructure significantly exceeds the airport’s capacity during the period for which slot allocation is being done
  • Expansion of airport infrastructure to meet demand is not possible in the short term
  • Attempts to resolve this problem through schedule adjustments have either failed or have proved to be ineffective

This mandates the airport to have a slot coordinator (team) which handles the process of slot allocation to balance capacity and demand.

What Is The Process For Applying For An Airport Slot?

If a new airline wants to operate on an air route, they have to request their government to allocate them rights to operate the route under the Air Services Agreement.

Once the airline is allotted the route, it becomes a “Designated carrier” which makes it eligible to file for slots with the origin and destination airport.

The global scheduling calendar for airlines is divided into two seasons – Summer (From last Sunday of March to last Saturday of October) and Winter (the remainder, last Sunday of October to last Saturday of March).

To give a snapshot of how early an airline has to plan, let us take the example of Summer 2019 schedule, which starts on March 31, 2019:

  • Airlines have already filed their desired slot requests on October 4, 2018. After negotiations, the airline and airport representatives will meet between November 13-16 to finalize the slots.
  • The airlines have to handover the slots which they don’t intend to operate by January 15, 2019.
  • IATA in fact publishes the schedule for future seasons as well.

Airlines today know that they need to file the schedule for flights starting 27th October 2019 (Winter schedule 2019) by May 9, 2019.

It’s a pretty long process and the wait may seem forever, but this process gets a lot of structure to the airport slot allotment procedure.

Who Allocates These Slots?

Slots can only be given by an airport coordinator who has been appointed to that specific airline.

The airline has to operate within the terms that have been agreed between both the parties. This means that airlines cannot intentionally operate services at a significantly different time or use slots in a significantly different way than allotted to them.

An airline who has already been operating in a slot is given preference, based on the historical data.

This is popularly known as the “use it or lose it” rule, where airlines have to operate at least 80% of the time during the period of slot allocation.

IATA rules mandate that historic slots of an airline should not be withdrawn from an airline to accommodate new entrance. But slots can be transferred or swapped between airlines.

How Do Airport Coordinators Allocate slots To New Airlines?

A Level 3 airport has to declare beforehand, its capacity and how airlines utilize this capacity.

All the available slots thereafter are part of the slot pool. Newly available slots (due to increase in capacity) are also part of this slot pool.

These slots are allocated to airlines in this specific order:

  • 50 percent of the slots contained in the pool are to be allotted to the new entrants(an airline that has never operated on that route), unless the demand from new entrants is less than 50 percent
  • When new slots are allocated, an airline asking for year round operations and higher frequency will have higher priority
  • The type of service given by the airline(scheduled, charter and cargo) and the market (domestic, regional and long haul) in which the airline operates is also a huge factor.
  • The location from the flight will start is also important. For example, a flight from Delhi or Mumbai, which are well connected, will be preferred over flights from Lucknow, whose flight network is not very large.

If the new entrant gets a slot within an hour of the time requested and the airline does not accept the slot, then the airline is not considered a new entrant.

How Strict Are Airports With Airlines Following Slot Timings?

During winters and monsoons, most airlines are not able to follow the schedules timing since the weather conditions are not good , which brings a huge variation in the approved time slot and the actual arrival time.

Airports are accommodative towards genuine reasons and based on historical data, help airlines offer a slot which is more realistic based on their historic arrival times.

Spicejet & IndiGo will both have a presence at Hong Kong and hence won’t be considered as new entrants for the next set of expansion. With airlines in India now looking at foreign shores, every rule will be used effectively to get the best slots at airports in India and abroad.

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Lion Air Under Investigation After Last Week’s Airplane Crash!

Last week, an unfortunate disaster hit Indonesia, where a Lion Air crashed plunged into the Java Sea just minutes after taking off from Jakarta, killing all 189 onboard.

Authorities are conducting a review of the operations of Lion Air, as the search for the main wreckage and cockpit voice recorder of the crashed Boeing jet continues into the seventh day.

The “special audit” will cover the standard operating procedures of the airline, the flight crew qualifications and coordination with industry stakeholders.

Indonesia’s aviation ministry is coordinating with institutions such as the European Union, the International Civil Aviation Organization and the Federal Aviation Administration. Corrective steps will be taken on the basis of the review.

The government had already ordered a review of Lion’s repair and maintenance unit and suspended several managers after the airline had reported some technical issues a day before the crash.

Even after a week-long search involving dozens of ships and hundreds of specialists, the plane’s main wreckage and the cockpit voice recorder that’s key to unravelling the mystery, are yet to be recovered.

However, search crews have recovered a flight data recorder, both the engines, a part of the landing gear, body parts of victims and personal belongings since the flight carrying 189 people plummeted into the sea.

Indonesia’s National Transportation Safety Committee recovered about 69 hours of flying data from the flight data recorder. The agency will begin analyzing the information from Monday to find out the reasons for the crash.

The Lion Air crash is the worst airline disaster in Indonesia since 1997, when 234 people died on a Garuda flight near Medan. In December 2014, an AirAsia flight from Surabaya to Singapore plunged into the sea, killing all 162 on board.

Indonesian airlines were barred in 2007 from flying to Europe because of safety concerns, though several were allowed to resume services in the following years.

 

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Authorities In Talks To Reopen Old Bangalore Airport For Commercial Use!

A decade after commercial flights moved from Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) airport to Kempegowda International Airport (KIA), authorities are in talks with Bangalore International Airport Limited (BIAL) to reopen the airport for commercial operations.

The HAL airport was shut down in 2008 in the wake of a concessional agreement between the ministry of civil aviation and BIAL that no commercial airport would function within a radius of 150 km from the Greenfield airfield(KIA) for a period of 25 years.

HAL airport currently handles military aircraft and test flights besides chartered and VIP jets.

Managing Director and chairman of HAL, Mr. V Madhavan, has initiated talks with BIAL to reopen the airport. HAL plans to lease it out to a private bidder but will continue to operate the Air Traffic Control.

He also said that reopening of the old airport for commercial flights would not affect flight tests of military aircraft by the Indian Air Force’s (IAF) Aircraft & Systems Testing Establishment (ASTE) and DRDO’s Centre for Airborne Systems (CABS).

Reopening of the old airport would mean a revisit of the concessional agreement signed between BIAL and ministry of civil aviation.

When it closed, HAL airport had reported revenue of around ₹150 crore. It is small in HAL’s overall current revenue of around ₹18,000 crore which mainly comes from selling fighters, transport planes and helicopters to the Air Force.

KIA started operating in 2008 at Devanahalli, about 40 km north of the city’s old central hub. It is the country’s third busiest after Delhi and Mumbai’s airports. In almost ten years, its annual passenger traffic has doubled to 25 million during 2017, about 19% being regional or short-haul travellers.

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Airlines Under Scanner For Alleged Fixing Of Airfares!

The Competition Commission of India (CCI) has initiated an inquiry into the pricing of air tickets after it found that airlines were allegedly following a similar pattern while setting tariffs, thus making the process anti-competitive.

Airlines follow a bucket system in pricing their tickets, wherein fares are lower if the ticket is booked in advance. Tariffs increase when the travel is booked closer to the date of departure.

Airlines say that this is a software-based system which takes into account historical booking patterns while pricing the tickets.

CCI, a fair trade regulator, is investigating allegations of similar pricing as well as a simultaneous increase in ticket prices by airlines. The cases pertain to steep fluctuations in airfares during the Jat agitation in Haryana, floods in Chennai, among other instances, in the last few years.

According to CCI chief Mr. Sudhir Mittal, during the Jat riots in Haryana, all airlines decided to increase the price of tickets on the same day. A similar thing happened in 2015 when floods hit Chennai.

The regulator is waiting for a report from the Director General (DG), which is its investigation arm. Generally, cases where the CCI finds evidence of violations of competition norms, DG is detailed to investigate.

Mr. Mittal has said that they have asked the DG to look into the algorithms, used by airlines for determining fares, to ascertain whether airlines coordinated to fix prices or the algorithms function on their own to determine prices.

CCI, which keeps a tab on unfair business practices across all sectors, has the power to penalise entities for anti-competitive ways and direct them to cease operations or desist from indulging in such practices.

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Turkey Unveils The World’s Largest Airport In Istanbul!

Turkey is all set to assert itself as the global hub for travel, as it inaugurates the “Istanbul New Airport”, which is the world’s largest airport to be built from scratch.

The airport, which will be fully functional over the next decade, has six runways and the whole airport is larger than all of Manhattan put together.

Not just that, it will be able to handle 200 million passengers per annum when fully operational, which is almost double of Hartsfield Jackson International Airport (The Busiest Airport In The World) located in Atlanta which handled 103 million passengers in 2017, with over 2,500 flights operated every day.

There are currently three terminals planned for Istanbul’s New Airport.

The Istanbul New Airport’s architecture reflects the rich cultural heritage of Istanbul, with the design inspiration coming from Istanbul’s various mosques, baths, domes and other historic structures. As you land, you will notice the ATC tower, which has been designed in the shape of a tulip, Turkey’s national flower.

The first flight took of yesterday from the newly inaugurated airport. Turkish Airlines flight TK2124 with 340 people on board completed its maiden flight from Istanbul to Turkey’s capital, Ankara.

For now, only 1 terminal is open as part of its 1st phase of operations. This terminal is the world’s largest airport terminal under one roof, with a capacity to handle 90 million passengers per day.

Turkish Airlines will operate 5 flights a day from this airport November 1 onwards, which will include three domestic and two international flights. For the next couple of months, it will use the airport code ISL and will use these five flights as a test case to complete the 1st phase by the end of 2018.

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Delhi Airport Now Among The Top 20 Busiest Airports In The World!

Indira Gandhi International Airport (IGIA) in New Delhi, which is one of the fastest growing major airports over the last four years, is now on the list of the 20 busiest airports in the world.

According to Delhi International Airport Ltd (DIAL), it was expected and also predicted that the passenger traffic will reach 95 million in the year 2023 because the airport’s expansion plan is on schedule.

Here are a few interesting figures that make Delhi one of the fastest growing airports in the world:

  • As per the data reported by Airports Council International (ACI), the global body that is responsible to monitor global airport traffic, Delhi airport’s compound annual growth rate (CAGR) between the years 2014 and 2017 is 14.3%.
  • This growth rate is the highest amongst the airports handling minimum 40 million passengers per annum, which includes famous international airports like Incheon airport in South Korea (10.5%), Pudong Shanghai airport in China (10.4%), and Dubai airport in UAE (7.4%).
  • In fact, since 2014, IGIA has been among the top three in the world when it comes to passenger traffic growth.
  • In the year 2016, the highest growth of 21% was registered by IGIA as against global annual average passenger growth of 6.5%. This is due to the huge growth in domestic passengers, which is almost 20% in the last five years.
  • According to a report by DIAL, over the last four years, 12 new scheduled airlines and over 10 international sectors have been introduced.

The report added that now the focus of DIAL is on airport capacity enhancement, terminal infrastructure, increase in flights per day and addition of new domestic as well as international sectors.

To do this, DIAL is expected to get an investment of Rs 9000 Crores. This investment will enable Delhi airport to boost its capacity and handle 100 million passengers in a year.

Soon, IGIA will also become the first airport in India to have four runways. The construction of the fourth runway is expected to begin this year and the airport officials are expecting to commission the runway by next year. Interestingly, this new move will increase the capacity of the airport from 75 flights to 105 flights an hour.

 

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